Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
The Search for Gravitational Waves Barry Barish Caltech University of Iowa 16-Sept-02 Newton Universal Gravitation Three laws of motion and law of gravitation (centripetal force) disparate phenomena » eccentric orbits of comets » cause of tides and their variations » the precession of the earth’s axis » the perturbation of the motion of the moon by gravity of the sun Solved most known problems of astronomy and terrestrial physics » Work of Galileo, Copernicus and Kepler unified. LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 2 Einstein’s Theory of Gravitation Newton’s Theory “instantaneous action at a distance” Einstein’s Theory information carried by gravitational radiation at the speed of light LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 3 General Relativity Einstein theorized that smaller masses travel toward larger masses, not because they are "attracted" by a mysterious force, but because the smaller objects travel through space that is warped by the larger object Imagine space as a stretched rubber sheet. A mass on the surface will cause a deformation. Another mass dropped onto the sheet will roll toward that mass. LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 4 Einstein’s Theory of Gravitation experimental tests Mercury’s orbit perihelion shifts forward an extra +43”/century compared to Newton’s theory Mercury's elliptical path around the Sun shifts slightly with each orbit such that its closest point to the Sun (or "perihelion") shifts forward with each pass. Astronomers had been aware for two centuries of a small flaw in the orbit, as predicted by Newton's laws. Einstein's predictions exactly matched the observation. LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 5 New Wrinkle on Equivalence bending of light Not only the path of matter, but even the path of light is affected by gravity from massive objects • First observed during the solar eclipse of 1919 by Sir Arthur Eddington, when the Sun was silhouetted against the Hyades star cluster • Their measurements showed that the light from these stars was bent as it grazed the Sun, by the exact amount of Einstein's predictions. A massive object shifts apparent position of a star The light never changes course, but merely follows the curvature of space. Astronomers now refer to this displacement of light as gravitational lensing. LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 6 Einstein’s Theory of Gravitation experimental tests “Einstein Cross” The bending of light rays gravitational lensing Quasar image appears around the central glow formed by nearby galaxy. The Einstein Cross is only visible in southern hemisphere. In modern astronomy, such gravitational lensing images are used to detect a ‘dark matter’ body as the central object LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 7 Einstein’s Theory of Gravitation gravitational waves • a necessary consequence of Special Relativity with its finite speed for information transfer • time dependent gravitational fields come from the acceleration of masses and propagate away from their sources as a spacetime warpage at the speed of light gravitational radiation binary inspiral of compact objects LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 8 Gravitational Waves the evidence Neutron Binary System – Hulse & Taylor PSR 1913 + 16 -- Timing of pulsars Emission of gravitational waves 17 / sec ~ 8 hr Neutron Binary System • separated by 106 miles • m1 = 1.4m; m2 = 1.36m; e = 0.617 Prediction from general relativity • spiral in by 3 mm/orbit LIGO-G020534-00-M • rate of change orbital period Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 9 Einstein’s Theory of Gravitation gravitational waves • Using Minkowski metric, the information about space-time curvature is contained in the metric as an added term, h. In the weak field limit, the equation can be described with linear equations. If the choice of gauge is the transverse traceless gauge the formulation becomes a familiar wave equation 1 2 ( 2 2 )h 0 c t 2 • The strain h takes the form of a plane wave propagating at the speed of light (c). • Since gravity is spin 2, the waves have two components, but rotated by 450 instead of 900 from each other. h h (t z / c ) hx (t z / c ) LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 10 Direct Detection a laboratory experiment? a la Hertz “gedanken experiment” Experimental Generation and Detection of Gravitational Waves LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 11 Direct Detection astrophysical sources Gravitational Wave Astrophysical Source Terrestrial detectors LIGO, TAMA, Virgo,AIGO Detectors in space LISA LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 12 Astrophysical Sources signatures Compact binary inspiral: “chirps” » NS-NS waveforms are well described » BH-BH need better waveforms » search technique: matched templates “bursts” Supernovae / GRBs: » burst signals in coincidence with signals in electromagnetic radiation » prompt alarm (~ one hour) with neutrino detectors Pulsars in our galaxy: “periodic” » search for observed neutron stars (frequency, doppler shift) » all sky search (computing challenge) » r-modes Cosmological Signals background” “stochastic LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 13 Interferometers space The Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) • The center of the triangle formation will be in the ecliptic plane • 1 AU from the Sun and 20 degrees behind the Earth. LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 14 Interferometers terrestrial free masses free masses International network (LIGO, Virgo, GEO, TAMA, AIGO) of suspended mass Michelson-type interferometers on earth’s surface detect distant astrophysical sources suspended test masses LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 15 Astrophysics Sources frequency range Audio band EM waves are studied over ~20 orders of magnitude » (ULF radio > HE -rays) Gravitational Waves over ~10 orders of magnitude » (terrestrial + space) Space Terrestrial LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 16 Interferometers international network Simultaneously detect signal (within msec) LIGO GEO Virgo TAMA detection confidence locate the sources AIGO decompose the polarization of gravitational waves LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 17 Suspended Mass Interferometer the concept An interferometric gravitational wave detector » A laser is used to measure the relative lengths of two orthogonal cavities (or arms) • Arms in LIGO are 4km » Current technology then allows one to measure h = dL/L ~ 10-21 which turns out to be an interesting target …causing the interference pattern to change at the photodiode As a wave passes, the arm lengths change in different ways…. LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 18 How Small is 10-18 Meter? One meter, about 40 inches 10,000 100 Human hair, about 100 microns Wavelength of light, about 1 micron 10,000 Atomic diameter, 10-10 meter 100,000 Nuclear diameter, 10-15 meter 1,000 LIGO sensitivity, 10-18 meter LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 19 What Limits Sensitivity of Interferometers? • Seismic noise & vibration limit at low frequencies • Atomic vibrations (Thermal Noise) inside components limit at mid frequencies • Quantum nature of light (Shot Noise) limits at high frequencies • Myriad details of the lasers, electronics, etc., can make problems above these levels LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 20 Noise Floor 40 m prototype sensitivity demonstration • displacement sensitivity in 40 m prototype. • comparison to predicted contributions from various noise sources LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 21 Phase Noise splitting the fringe expected signal 10-10 radians phase shift demonstration experiment • spectral sensitivity of MIT phase noise interferometer • above 500 Hz shot noise limited near LIGO I goal • additional features are from 60 Hz powerline harmonics, wire resonances (600 Hz), mount resonances, etc LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 22 The Laboratory Sites Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO) Hanford Observatory Livingston Observatory LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 23 LIGO Livingston Observatory LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 24 LIGO Hanford Observatory LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 25 LIGO beam tube 1.2 m diameter - 3mm stainless 50 km of weld LIGO beam tube under construction in January 1998 65 ft spiral welded sections girth welded in portable clean room in the field NO LEAKS !! LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 26 LIGO vacuum equipment LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 27 Core Optics fused silica LIGO requirements Surface uniformity < 1 nm rms Scatter < 50 ppm Absorption < 2 ppm ROC matched < 3% Internal mode Q’s > 2 x 106 LIGO measurements • central 80 mm of 4ITM06 (Hanford 4K) • rms = 0.16 nm • optic far exceeds specification. Surface figure = / 6000 LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 28 Core Optics installation and alignment LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 29 Interferometer locking end test mass Requires test masses to be held in position to 10-10-10-13 meter: “Locking the interferometer” Light bounces back and forth along arms about 150 times Light is “recycled” about 50 times input test mass Laser signal LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 30 Lock Acquisition LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 31 LIGO watching the interferometer lock Composite Video Y Arm Laser X Arm signal LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 32 LIGO watching the interferometer lock Y arm X arm 2 min Y Arm Reflected light Anti-symmetric port Laser X Arm signal LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 33 LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 34 Engineering Run detecting earthquakes From electronic logbook 2-Jan-02 An earthquake occurred, starting at UTC 17:38. The plot shows the band limited rms output in counts over the 0.10.3Hz band for four seismometer channels. We turned off lock acquisition and are waiting for the ground motion to calm down. LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 35 17:03:03 01/02/2002 ========================================================================= Seismo-Watch Earthquake Alert Bulletin No. 02-64441 ========================================================================= Preliminary data indicates a significant earthquake has occurred: Regional Location: VANUATU ISLANDS Magnitude: 7.3M Greenwich Mean Date: 2002/01/02 Greenwich Mean Time: 17:22:50 Latitude: 17.78S Longitude: 167.83E Focal depth: 33.0km Analysis Quality: A Source: National Earthquake Information Center (USGS-NEIC) Seismo-Watch, Your Source for Earthquake News and Information. Visit http://www.seismo-watch.com ========================================================================= All data are preliminary and subject to change. Analysis Quality: A (good), B (fair), C (poor), D (bad) LIGO-G020534-00-M Magnitude: Ml (local or Richter magnitude), Lg (mblg), Md (duration), Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium ========================================================================= 36 Detecting the Earth Tides Sun and Moon LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 37 LIGO Goals and Priorities Interferometer performance » Integrate commissioning and data taking consistent with obtaining one year of integrated data at h = 10-21 by end of 2006 Physics results from LIGO I » Initial upper limit results by early 2003 » First search results in 2004 » Reach LIGO I goals by 2007 Advanced LIGO » Prepare advanced LIGO proposal this fall » International collaboration and broad LSC participation » Advanced LIGO installation beginning by 2007 LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 38 Preliminary LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 39 LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 40 Astrophysical Sources the search for gravitational waves Compact binary inspiral: “chirps” » NS-NS waveforms are well described » BH-BH need better waveforms » search technique: matched templates Supernovae / GRBs: “bursts” » burst signals in coincidence with signals in electromagnetic radiation » prompt alarm (~ one hour) with neutrino detectors Pulsars in our galaxy: “periodic” » search for observed neutron stars (frequency, doppler shift) » all sky search (computing challenge) » r-modes Cosmological Signals “stochastic background” LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 41 “Chirp Signal” binary inspiral determine •distance from the earth r •masses of the two bodies •orbital eccentricity e and orbital inclination i LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 42 Interferometer Data 40 m prototype Real interferometer data is UGLY!!! (Gliches - known and unknown) LOCKING NORMAL RINGING ROCKING LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 43 The Problem How much does real data degrade complicate the data analysis and degrade the sensitivity ?? Test with real data by setting an upper limit on galactic neutron star inspiral rate using 40 m data LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 44 “Clean up” data stream Effect of removing sinusoidal artifacts using multi-taper methods Non stationary noise Non gaussian tails LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 45 Inspiral ‘Chirp’ Signal Template Waveforms “matched filtering” 687 filters 44.8 hrs of data 39.9 hrs arms locked 25.0 hrs good data sensitivity to our galaxy h ~ 3.5 10-19 mHz-1/2 expected rate ~10-6/yr LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 46 Optimal Signal Detection Want to “lock-on” to one of a set of known signals Requires: • source modeling • efficient algorithm • many computers LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 47 Detection Efficiency • Simulated inspiral events provide end to end test of analysis and simulation code for reconstruction efficiency • Errors in distance measurements from presence of noise are consistent with SNR fluctuations LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 48 Astrophysical Sources the search for gravitational waves Compact binary inspiral: “chirps” » NS-NS waveforms are well described » BH-BH need better waveforms » search technique: matched templates Supernovae / GRBs: “bursts” » burst signals in coincidence with signals in electromagnetic radiation » prompt alarm (~ one hour) with neutrino detectors Pulsars in our galaxy: “periodic” » search for observed neutron stars (frequency, doppler shift) » all sky search (computing challenge) » r-modes Cosmological Signals “stochastic background” LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 49 “Burst Signal” supernova gravitational waves ’s light LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 50 Supernovae gravitational waves Non axisymmetric collapse ‘burst’ signal Rate 1/50 yr - our galaxy 3/yr - Virgo cluster LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 51 Supernovae asymmetric collapse? pulsar proper motions Velocities young SNR(pulsars?) > 500 km/sec Burrows et al recoil velocity of matter and neutrinos LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 52 Supernovae signatures and sensitivity LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 53 Astrophysical Sources the search for gravitational waves Compact binary inspiral: “chirps” » NS-NS waveforms are well described » BH-BH need better waveforms » search technique: matched templates Supernovae / GRBs: “bursts” » burst signals in coincidence with signals in electromagnetic radiation » prompt alarm (~ one hour) with neutrino detectors Pulsars in our galaxy: “periodic” » search for observed neutron stars (frequency, doppler shift) » all sky search (computing challenge) » r-modes Cosmological Signals “stochastic background” LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 54 Periodic Signals spinning neutron stars Maximum gravitational wave luminosity of known pulsars Isolated neutron stars with deformed crust Newborn neutron stars with rmodes X-ray binaries may be limited by gravitational waves LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 55 “Periodic Signals” pulsars sensitivity Pulsars in our galaxy »non axisymmetric: 10-4 < e < 10-6 »science: neutron star precession; interiors »narrow band searches best LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 56 Astrophysical Sources the search for gravitational waves Compact binary inspiral: “chirps” » NS-NS waveforms are well described » BH-BH need better waveforms » search technique: matched templates Supernovae / GRBs: “bursts” » burst signals in coincidence with signals in electromagnetic radiation » prompt alarm (~ one hour) with neutrino detectors Pulsars in our galaxy: “periodic” » search for observed neutron stars (frequency, doppler shift) » all sky search (computing challenge) » r-modes Cosmological Signals “stochastic background” LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 57 “Stochastic Background” cosmological signals ‘Murmurs’ from the Big Bang signals from the early universe Cosmic microwave background LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 58 Stochastic Background coherence plot LHO 2K & LLO 4K LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 59 Stochastic Background projected sensitivities LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 60 Advanced LIGO Multiple Suspension Active Seismic Sapphire Optics Higher Power Laser LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 61 Advanced LIGO • • • • Enhanced Systems improved laser suspension seismic isolation test mass material • narrow band optics Improvement factor ~ 104 LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 62 Conclusions LIGO construction complete LIGO commissioning and testing ‘on track’ Engineering test runs underway, during period when emphasis is on commissioning, detector sensitivity and reliability. (Short upper limit data runs interleaved) First Science Search Run : first search run begin in 2003 Significant improvements in sensitivity anticipated to begin about 2006 Detection is likely within the next decade ! LIGO-G020534-00-M Univerity of Iowa - Colloquium 63